101 Hilarious Ghost Stories fully embraces its mission: to scare you just enough that the punchlines land harder. From the opening scene, the film makes it clear that this haunted mansion isn’t about terror—it’s about timing, chaos, and ghosts who desperately want to be comedians.

Melissa McCarthy is the undeniable engine of the movie. As the wildly expressive storyteller, she treats every ghost tale like a stand-up routine, leaning into physical comedy, exaggerated fear, and rapid-fire improvisation. What makes her performance work is that she never plays it safe—every scare becomes an opportunity for escalation, turning even silence into comedy.
Kevin Hart provides the perfect counterbalance. His character’s insistence that “this is all fake” becomes funnier with every supernatural interruption. Hart excels at panic-based humor, and the film smartly gives him extended sequences where fear slowly overtakes denial, resulting in some of the movie’s biggest laughs.

Tiffany Haddish shines as the skeptic who wants logic to win, even as logic repeatedly betrays her. Her blunt delivery and fearless reactions ground the absurdity, making the madness feel communal rather than cartoonish. Every time she screams, argues with a ghost, or demands answers from the universe, the audience is right there with her.
John Cena plays against type in an especially effective way. His “nothing scares me” bravado collapses piece by piece as ghosts begin targeting him specifically—mocking his toughness, rearranging weights, and humiliating him in slapstick fashion. The film milks this reversal beautifully, and Cena’s willingness to look ridiculous pays off.
Structurally, the movie’s “101 stories” concept works surprisingly well. Rather than feeling episodic, the stories bleed into one another, each haunting escalating the environment. What starts as storytelling becomes manifestation, until the mansion itself feels like a stand-up club for ghosts with terrible jokes and no filter.

The ghosts are the film’s secret weapon. From the dad-joke-obsessed spirit to the passive-aggressive poltergeist and the haunted vacuum cleaner with commitment issues, each supernatural presence has a clear comedic identity. None of them are truly frightening—but they are relentlessly annoying in the best possible way.
Visually, the film leans into playful horror aesthetics. Shadows move too much, doors slam for no reason, and props behave like pranksters. The mansion feels alive, but never oppressive—more mischievous than malevolent. This keeps the tone light and accessible even for viewers who don’t usually enjoy horror.
What elevates 101 Hilarious Ghost Stories beyond a simple gag-fest is its ensemble chemistry. The cast genuinely feels like a group of friends unraveling together, and their shared disbelief, bickering, and eventual cooperation give the movie a warm, communal energy.

The pacing stays sharp, rarely lingering too long on a single joke. Even when a gag misses, the next one arrives quickly enough to recover momentum. By the final act, the chaos is so complete that the audience is laughing in anticipation of what might go wrong next.
In the end, 101 Hilarious Ghost Stories succeeds because it understands its audience. It doesn’t try to reinvent horror or comedy—it just combines them with confidence, generosity, and a stacked cast willing to go all-in. It’s the kind of movie best watched with friends, lights low, snacks ready, and expectations tuned for pure fun. ⭐⭐⭐⭐